UNICEF: Boko Haram use of child bombers soars

At least 83 children, mostly girls, used by the armed group in suicide attacks this year, says the UN agency.

22 Aug 2017 19:57 GMT

The UN has voiced alarm at Boko Haram's increasing use of children as "human bombs" [File: Jossy Ola/AP]

The number of children, mainly girls, used by the Nigerian armed group Boko Haram as "human bombs" has quadrupled this year, according to UNICEF.

The UN's children agency said on Tuesday that since January 1, 2017, 83 children have been used by the group to carry out bomb attacks in north-eastern Nigeria - four times higher than it was for the entirety of 2016.

The body said 55 of them were girls, most often under the age of 15. Twenty-seven were boys, and one was a baby strapped to a girl.

"UNICEF is extremely concerned about an appalling increase in the cruel and calculated use of children, especially girls, as 'human bombs' in northeast Nigeria," the agency said. "The use of children in this way is an atrocity."

Muhammed said that armed groups like Boko Haram give children a sense of belonging in a society where they do not have the basic necessities.

"Children tend to fall into the hands of Boko Haram, who would then reign over them and use them, just because they feel that they belong and they have persuaded them that maybe this is the cause of life," she explained.

'Rise up against atrocities'

The UN estimates that 20,000 people have been killed and at least 1.7 million displaced since the armed group launched its armed campaign in northeast Nigeria eight years ago.

The violence has also spread to neighbouring countries, leading to the closure of more than 2,000 schools in Nigeria, Chad, Niger and Cameroon, according to a 2015 UNICEF report.

Chibok community welcomes schoolgirls release

Hundreds of others have been attacked, looted or burned by Boko Haram, while an estimated one million children have been forced out of school as a result of violent attacks in northeastern Nigeria and its neighbouring countries.

In its statement on Tuesday, UNICEF said that the attacks have led to children who escape or are released by Boko Haram being viewed with suspicion and rejected by their communities.

The violence and security situation in the region has also forced thousands of parents not to send their children to schools.

"I think the society needs to own up to its irresponsibilities of not catering for its children and rise up against such atrocities," Muhammed said.

UNICEF's Kidane offered optimism that efforts are being made to put an end to the crisis.

"We are seeing a lot of collaboration with the military in Nigeria," she said. "Work is being done so that the release of these children is done as quickly as possible while maintaining their human dignity."